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Indigenous engineering in Canada
Analysis of secondary data to support Engineers Canada’s Operational Imperative 9 sub-
strategy: Indigenous access to engineering
1.0 Executive summary
In 2019, as part of Engineers Canada’s work on equity, diversity and inclusion, Engineers Canada approved
the Operational imperative 9 sub-strategy on Indigenous access to engineering. This sub-strategy includes a
goal of collecting data on Indigenous engineering students and professionals in Canada. To meet this goal,
Engineers Canada has worked with Big River Analytics to identify and analyze secondary data to estimate
the number of Indigenous engineers. This report summarizes this data and estimates related to the
participation of Indigenous engineers in the profession. Engineers Canada and Engineers Canada’s
Indigenous Advisory Committee see better understanding Indigenous representation as a foundational step
to identifying and building supports for Indigenous people in engineering.
The key metric presented in this report is the proportion of all engineers that identify as Indigenous, as
defined by National Occupation Classification (NOC) codes (see Section 2.1 and 3.1). As a measure of
diversity, equity, and inclusion, this metric is compared to two benchmarks: the proportion of Indigenous
people in the labour force in their main working years (aged 25 - 64), and the proportion of all Canadians
that identify as Indigenous. To better estimate the number of professional engineers, where possible, we
report estimates of individuals with engineering NOCs and an education level at a bachelor or above. This
report also compares demographics, educational attainment, geographic location, and income between
Indigenous and non-Indigenous engineers. The main findings of our analysis are:
The initial analysis in this report estimates the gap in representation between Indigenous and non-Indigenous
individuals in engineering occupations. Existing secondary data is not able to identify which individuals in
engineering occupations are professional engineers as licensed by regulators. Section 4.0 highlights
recommendations for additional research to refine and expand Engineers Canada's understanding of access
to engineering among Indigenous people.
2.0 Background
Since the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada (TRC) released its 94 Calls to Action in 2015,
various initiatives were put into place by different levels of government and organizations to begin the
process of reconciliation (Yellowhead Institute, 2019)
1
. The Calls to Action encourage Canadians to learn
about and understand the history of Indigenous peoples in Canada and to engage in the process of
reconciliation. In the context of employment and the labour force, Calls to Action 7 and 92 seek to eliminate
employment gaps between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Canadians, ensure Indigenous people have equal
access to jobs and training, and encourage corporations to adopt reconciliation frameworks throughout their
policies and practices. These Calls to Action support strategies of inclusion and diversity in the workplace and
are reflected in Engineers Canada’s efforts to achieve an engineering workforce that “reflects the
demographics of Canadian society and continues to meet the needs of the Canadian economy” (
About
Indigenous people are underrepresented in engineering occupations relative to Indigenous
representation in the total population and in the labour force. This finding holds at both the national
and provincial level.
»
Considering only those individuals in their main working years with an education at the
bachelor level or above, the percentage of all engineers that identify as Indigenous is 0.73 per
cent. The percentage of the labour force in their main working years that identify as Indigenous
is 3.15 per cent. By this metric, for the engineering profession to include a representative
number of Indigenous people, an additional 5,620 Indigenous engineers are required.
»
The percentage of the total population in Canada that identify as Indigenous is 4.9 per cent. If
we consider Indigenous representation in the total population as our benchmark, for the
engineering profession to include a representative number of Indigenous people, an additional
9,678 Indigenous engineers are required.
»
The largest within-province gaps are in Nunavut, Northwest Territories, Yukon, Manitoba, and
Saskatchewan.
»
The lack of Indigenous representation identified in our analysis likely understates the actual
underrepresentation among professional engineers. Only 60.39 per cent of Indigenous engineers have
a university education at a bachelor level or above, compared to 82.00 per cent of non-Indigenous
engineers. A university education at a bachelor level or above is generally required to be certified by
the engineering regulators.
»
The regional distribution of Indigenous engineers reflects the distribution of the total Indigenous
population in Canada. Provinces with a higher Indigenous population also have a higher count of
Indigenous engineers. Representation among Indigenous engineers is highest in Ontario, Alberta,
Quebec, and British Columbia.
»
2
Diversity in Engineering
, 2020).
Engineers Canada consulted with engineering regulators and Indigenous engineers to create the Operational
Imperative 9 sub-strategy: Indigenous access to engineering. The sub-strategy includes the following goals:
To achieve these goals, Engineers Canada receives guidance from its Indigenous Advisory Committee, and
works in collaboration with the engineering regulators, and post-secondary engineering programs to share
knowledge on Indigenizing engineering education and occupational environments. Examples of these
measures include supporting the creation of the Canadian Indigenous Advisory Council,
2
publishing a report
on Indigenous students’ access to post-secondary engineering programs, and forming a Decolonizing and
Indigenizing Engineering Education Network that addresses access to engineering education for Indigenous
people. These measures have the objective of supporting and advancing reconciliation within engineering
education programs (
Indigenous Peoples in Engineering
, 2020).
Engineers Canada has partnered with Big River Analytics to better understand Indigenous representation in
engineering by answering several research questions that provide a foundational understanding of
Indigenous engineers in the workforce. These research questions include:
1.
Which National Occupational Classifications (NOC) best correspond to the professional engineers of
the 12 regulators?
2.
How many Indigenous engineers are there in Canada?
1.
What other socio-demographic and labour market characteristics can we understand from
secondary data about Indigenous engineers?
3.
What can we infer about the diversity of professional engineers across the 12 regulators?
4.
Which other variables related to the diversity of professional engineers in Canada are readily
available from secondary sources (e.g. sex/gender, visible minority, recent immigrants etc.)?
Although conditions have generally been improving over the past several decades, the 2016 Census of the
Population (2016 Census) shows that many socioeconomic gaps between the Indigenous and non-Indigenous
population persist. For example, 52.07 per cent of the Indigenous population are employed compared to
60.51 per cent of the non-Indigenous population and the Indigenous unemployment rate (15.22 per cent) is
twice as high as the non-Indigenous unemployment rate (7.41 per cent). Additionally, there are differences in
the concentration of Indigenous and non-Indigenous employment in various occupations. According to a
study conducted by Statistics Canada (2017) using data from the Labour Force Survey (LFS),
“Aboriginal
3
people were less likely than non?Aboriginal people to work in natural and applied sciences and
related occupations; business, finance and administration occupations; management occupations; and health
occupations. The only group of knowledge occupations in which Aboriginal people are overrepresented is
education, law and social, community and government services” (Statistics Canada, 2017c).
Indigenous people tend to be underrepresented in occupations that require higher levels of education, and
engineering is no exception. Access to education was one of the top three barriers to employment mentioned
by respondents to the 2017 Aboriginal Peoples Survey (APS), a finding that is supported by findings from the
2016 Census, which shows that 21.37 per cent of the Indigenous workforce has less than a high school
education compared to 10.31 per cent of the non-Indigenous workforce, and 11.67 per cent of the Indigenous
workforce has a bachelor’s degree or higher compared to 28.52 per cent of the non-Indigenous workforce.
There is good evidence to suggest that this gap in educational attainment is the result of the history of
colonialism and oppression of Indigenous peoples in Canada, which has created inequalities in spaces such
as education, healthcare, and the labour market (MacDonald & Steenbeek, 2015).
By examining the information available from the 2016 Census, Engineers Canada hopes to better understand
the current state of diversity, equity, and inclusion of Indigenous people in the engineering profession. This
report highlights differences between Indigenous and non-Indigenous engineers, such as their level of
education and age distribution, and discusses various instances of the underrepresentation of Indigenous
engineers compared to benchmarks of diversity. This report begins with an overview of secondary data
sources, followed by a data analysis section and an examination of additional research questions, and
concludes with recommendations for future primary data collection that would support a more detailed
analysis of similar research topics.
2.1 Data sources
In general, data can be categorized as either primary or secondary. Primary data is defined as data collected
Engineers Canada supports engagement with Indigenous histories, increasing awareness and cultural
competency?.
»
Engineers Canada supports Indigenous engineers and engineering students.
»
Engineers Canada explores collection of data on Indigenous students and professionals.
»
Engineers Canada develops a framework for engaging with Indigenous organizations?.
»
3
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first-hand for the expressed purpose of answering a specific research question. Secondary data is defined as
data that was originally collected for a specific research purpose but is being used in a context outside of
that original purpose. Secondary data is available from a variety of sources including government institutions
like Statistics Canada, and other organizations like financial institutions and universities.
When using secondary data, it is important to understand the content of the data set, the data quality, the
collection method(s), any weights applied to the data, and the advantages and limitations of the data as they
apply to your research question. One advantage to using Statistics Canada data products, and most
secondary data products, is that they are relatively inexpensive and easy to access. Statistics Canada offers
publicly available data in the form of tables, custom tabulations, and anonymized data sets. Since using
secondary data is significantly less costly than collecting primary data, it should be used to the extent that it
serves the research project. For example, secondary data can be used to frame and better understand the
context of a research landscape prior to embarking on a primary data collection exercise.
2.1.1 The National Occupational Classification system
In Statistics Canada’s products, occupations are categorized using the NOC system, which was developed
and is maintained by Employment and Social Development Canada (ESDC). ESDC is responsible for
organizing unique occupations into groups by skill level and type. NOCs are classified using a numerical code
that can be up to four digits. The first number in the code series indicates skill type. Employment positions
within engineering occupations fall under two skill types: group 0 for management roles and group 2 for
occupations in natural and applied sciences. The second number in the NOC code series refers to the skill
level. Both management and general engineering NOC codes are grouped under 0 or 1, indicating that they
“usually require university education” (Employment and Social Development Canada, 2020). The third and
fourth numbers in the NOC code specify the minor group and unit group of the specific occupation. As such,
using NOCs allows for analysis among engineering specializations, such as civil, mechanical, software,
petroleum, and several other engineering categories.
2.1.2 Assumptions when using NOCs to estimate engineers
Important for this report, NOCs do not provide information on who is a professional engineer, so we infer this
information by filtering for both occupation type and education levels that align with those of a professional
engineer.
4
A detailed list of NOCs that align with the accredited engineering programs is provided in Section
3.1 and Table 3.1. When referencing individuals in engineering occupations we include anyone with an
engineering NOC, listed in Section 3.1. To better estimate professional engineers, where possible, we identify
individuals with engineering NOCs and an education level at a bachelor or above.
Although using NOCs limits our ability to identify professional engineers, it does still provide insights into
access to the engineering field. Additionally, if we assume that a combination of NOCs and education are
equally accurate in identifying Indigenous and non-Indigenous professional engineers, this limitation does not
impact the accuracy of the gap measured between both groups. In other words, if we assume the same
proportion of Indigenous and non-Indigenous individuals with a bachelor's level or higher education who are
in the labour force in engineering NOCs are in fact professional engineers, comparing the respective rates of
representation in each population would still accurately estimate a gap in representation.
2.1.3 The Census of the Population
In this report, we use the 2016 Census as a secondary data source to examine Indigenous inclusion in
engineering. Despite being somewhat dated, the 2016 Census is the most appropriate secondary data
source for this project as it is a detailed data set that yields preliminary answers to our research questions.
Data from the 2016 Census come from two different questionnaires: the long-form and short-form. The long-
form includes the same questions as the short-form with an additional set of questions that allow for a
deeper understanding of respondents’ activities of daily living, sociocultural information, Indigenous
identity,
5
mobility, place of birth, education level, labour market activities, and housing situation. Because of
the increased effort required to participate in, collect, and process the long-form census, it is delivered to a
25 per cent sample of Canadian households. In 2016, and likely for all future census enumerations, the short-
form and long-form questionnaires were mandatory and had a combined response rate of 97.4 per cent. The
combined response rate is calculated by dividing the number of private dwellings for which a census
questionnaire was completed by the total number of estimated private dwellings in Canada. Among census
enumerations, the 2016 Census had a particularly high response rate which allows for precise estimates that
are less likely to suffer from non-response bias. Non-response bias occurs when certain groups of people
respond more or less frequently to a survey than other groups of people and the aspects that define these
groups are correlated with variables of interest. For example, suppose people with lower incomes responded
less frequently to the long-form census than people with higher incomes. If we were interested in Canadian’s
incomes, this biased sample would tend to overestimate the average income in the Canadian population.
4
For a subset of the information they collect such as date of birth, age, sex, relationship to members of their
household, and knowledge of languages, the combined short- and long-form questionnaires are considered a
true census in that they endeavor to enumerate the entire Canadian population. The long-form questionnaire
enumerates a 1 in 4 (25 per cent) sample of the population. The long-form sample of the 2016 Census is
designed to be representative of all Canadians and is enumerated by selecting participants based on an
equal division of 46,000 small geographic areas called collection units (CUs) that span across Canada
(Statistics Canada, 2017d). To increase the accuracy of the estimates that rely on information from the long-
form census, responses are weighted to correct for any groups that might be over or under sampled. Another
method that is used to increase estimate quality and correct for non-responses is imputation, which involves
replacing missing, invalid, or inconsistent elements with plausible values and allows for the creation of a full
dataset of information (Statistics Canada, 2017b). Imputation is directly related to the global non-response
rate (GNR), which is the standard measure of data quality for comparing census products. The GNR is
measured by combining non-responses for households and individual questions and comparing that to the
number of households and questions included in enumeration. The national GNR for the 2016 short-form and
long-form questionnaires is 4.00 per cent and 5.10 per cent respectively. In 2011, Statistics Canada replaced
the long-form questionnaire with the 2011 National Household Survey (NHS). The most substantive change
between previous and later long-form enumerations and the NHS is that the NHS was voluntary. As a result,
the 2011 NHS has a GNR of 26.10 per cent. Having a higher GNR means there is a higher risk of non-
response bias.
The 2016 Census provides good coverage of the population (97.4 per cent response rate) and high data
quality (low GNR). While data quality from the census is often very good, the expense and effort required to
collect so much information limits the frequency at which it can be collected to once every five years. The
most recent data available is from the 2016 enumeration period and data releases can take up to two years
following the enumeration. The next census enumeration will take place in 2021. To help fill the data gaps
between census years there are other Statistics Canada products that are used to produce interim estimates,
such as the LFS.
Another limitation of the 2016 Census, for the purposes of this report, is missing data from 14 Indigenous
reserves and settlements that were not enumerated. The population and dwelling counts from the 14
Indigenous reserves and settlements are not included in the 2016 estimates or tables. The impact of this
missing data on a national level for a broad analysis of the Indigenous or non-Indigenous population is small
because missing data are relatively small in comparison to the population of interest. The effects of this
missing data could be more significant when looking at lower-level geographic areas that would include the
missing reserves and settlements (Statistics Canada, 2017a).
6
2.1.4 The Labour Force Survey
The LFS is a household survey that is enumerated monthly to primarily examine the labour market and
estimate individuals’ employment, unemployment, and labour force participation in Canada. The LFS
provides additional information on age, sex, marital status, educational attainment, Indigenous identity,
occupation group, income, and hours worked. The LFS targets individuals aged 15 years and older. Questions
regarding Indigenous identity, defined as persons who reported being First Nations, Métis, or Inuk (Inuit),
were extended to surveys in all provinces in 2007 to provide labour force insights regarding the off-reserve
Indigenous population. The LFS has a much smaller sample size than the short-form census questionnaire,
which is sent to all Canadian households (approximately 56,000 households compared to over 14 million
households in 2016, respectively) and it does not include Indigenous reserves or settlements due to
challenges with consistent access to respondents and travel costs to reach remote or rural areas. In addition
to Indigenous reserves or settlements, the LFS excludes residents inhabiting institutions,
7
full-time members
of the armed forces, and some households in remote areas with small population densities. Together these
groups make up less than 2 per cent of the Canadian population aged 15 years and older, so their omission is
insubstantial and is unlikely to lead to significant non-response bias (Statistics Canada, 2020a). The average
non-response rate for the enumeration of eligible households
8
in the LFS is 10 per cent and is accounted for
through weighting adjustments and imputations that ensure the LFS estimates reflect characteristics of the
Canadian population estimated in the 2016 Census.
Due to the relatively small sample size of the LFS and the requirements of the
Statistics Act
, the level of
detail available from the LFS is limited relative to products with larger sample sizes like the 2016 Census. For
instance, when there is a risk of imprecise estimates due to small sample size, sampling error, or bias due to
non-response, the table will either be flagged to alert the user of the potential for low quality data or
suppressed entirely. The suppression of estimates in Statistics Canada products is used to meet the
confidentiality requirements of the
Statistics Act
and prevent the identification of individuals. Area
suppression is a common problem when trying to extract data for geographic regions that have small
population counts or survey response counts. Suppression is also common when looking at a cross section of
multiple different characteristics. For example, we are unable to retrieve data on engineers who are
Indigenous, female, between the ages of 25 and 64, and live in Manitoba because there is a risk that the
resulting table could identify individual respondents. For these reasons, the majority of data we requested
from the LFS on Indigenous engineers is suppressed and unusable.
5
Data from the 2016 Census on Indigenous engineers are publicly available at the national level and for most
provincial level analysis when considering only a small set of attributes (e.g. only grouping by gender and
age, or by occupation type and education level). Publicly available data from the 2016 Census and LFS are
unable to meet the needs of highly detailed analyses. For detailed analyses related to Indigenous engineers,
for example, a detailed geographic analysis, primary data collection is required. Further discussion on
primary data collection can be found in Section 4.0.
2.1.5 Other data sources
Other Statistics Canada products that we reviewed but did not include in our analysis were the 2006 Census,
2011 Census and NHS, and the APS. The census and NHS data products were omitted because the findings
from these sources would be dated and due to the non-response limitations of the NHS discussed in Section
2.1.1.
The APS is a household survey of the off-reserve Indigenous population (First Nations, Métis, and Inuit) aged
15 years and older that provides data on social and economic conditions of Indigenous peoples. The final
sample for the APS was generated from those individuals who identified as Indigenous or indicated having
Indigenous ancestry in the 2016 Census. The APS sample contained over 43,000 household units that
resulted in 32,330 responses (76 per cent response rate) (Statistics Canada, 2018). The APS includes
information on occupation, job satisfaction, job acquisition processes, difficulties involved in looking for
employment, resources that would help with finding employment, reasons for not working, labour mobility,
and several other detailed questions regarding labour market activity. One limitation of the APS is the limited
access to publicly published tables that include information on occupation. Information on respondent’s
occupations can be found in the APS microdata files accessed through Statistics Canada’s Research Data
Centres (RDCs) or through custom data table requests available for a fee. Overall, the APS is a good resource
that complements the 2016 Census and could be used in future research to provide more context about the
labour market experiences and education of Indigenous engineers.
2.2 Research questions
The following four research questions guide our analysis:
Q1. Which NOCs correspond to the professional engineers licensed by the 12 regulators?
Q2. How many Indigenous engineers are there in Canada? What other socio-demographic and labour
market characteristics can we understand from secondary data about Indigenous engineers?
Q3. What can we infer about the diversity of professional engineers across the 12 regulators?
Q4. Which other variables related to the diversity of professional engineers in Canada are readily available
from secondary sources (e.g. sex/gender, visible minority, recent immigrants etc.)?
3.0 Analysis
3.1 (Q1) Relevant National Occupational Classifications
NOCs provide a “systematic classification structure that categorizes the entire range of occupational activity
in Canada for collecting, analyzing, and disseminating occupational data for labour market information and
employment-related program administration” (Employment and Social Development Canada, 2020). The
data we use from the 2016 Census provides NOCs between the one and four-digit level. Three-digit NOCs
represent minor groupings of occupations and are the parent classification to four-digit NOCs, which
represent unique occupations.
The NOC codes that correspond to the accredited engineering programs overseen by the 12 regulators are
presented in Table 3.1. When referencing the general population of engineers, we include these same four
NOCs:
NOC 213: Civil, mechanical, electrical, and chemical engineers;
»
NOC 214: Other engineers;
»
NOC 0211: Engineering managers; and
»
NOC 2173: Software engineers.
»
6
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Table 3.1: National Occupation Classifications by three- and four-digit code,
corresponding to engineering occupations licensed by the engineering
regulators
NOC
Occupation Title
0211
Engineering managers
213
Civil, mechanical, electrical, and chemical engineers
2131
Civil engineers
2132
Mechanical engineers
2133
Electrical and electronics engineers
2134
Chemical engineers
214
Other engineers
2141
Industrial and manufacturing engineers
2142
Metallurgical and materials engineers
2143
Mining engineers
2144
Geological engineers
2145
Petroleum engineers
2146
Aerospace engineers
2147
Computer engineers (except software engineers and
designers)
2148
Other professional engineers, n.e.c.
2173
Software engineers
Source: Employment and Social Development Canada & Statistics Canada, 2016, National Occupational
Classification
3.2 (Q2) Number and characteristics of Indigenous engineers in Canada
This section provides an overview of characteristics for Indigenous and non-Indigenous engineers at the
national level. The seven subsections within this section provide information on: the number of Indigenous
engineers in Canada, the representation of Indigenous people within engineering in comparison to
Indigenous representation in the labour force and in the Canadian population, the level of educational
attainment for Indigenous engineers, the specific engineering occupation with the highest proportion of
Indigenous engineers, the distribution of engineers by Indigenous identity, the demographic breakdown
between Indigenous and non-Indigenous engineers, and the median incomes of Indigenous and non-
Indigenous engineers.
3.2.1 Indigenous representation in engineering
We are interested in the number of Indigenous people in engineering to understand the extent to which they
are underrepresented. It is a simple exercise to estimate the percentage of engineers that are Indigenous,
but it is more challenging to develop a reasonable benchmark for the percentage of Indigenous engineers
that would represent a desired level of diversity, equity, and inclusion. The simplest benchmark is the
percentage of Indigenous representation in Canada overall. However, this benchmark does not take into
account demographic differences between the Indigenous and non-Indigenous populations. Specifically, as
demonstrated in Figure 3.2.1, the Indigenous population is substantially younger than the non-Indigenous
population. This is relevant because engineers are generally over 24 years of age due to licensing
requirements. In short, to be a licensed engineer and to access engineering occupations requires a university
degree in addition to other prerequisites that take time to obtain. The demographic discrepancy between the
Indigenous and non-Indigenous population suggests that using the overall rate of Indigenous representation
in the Canadian population would produce a benchmark that is too high because we cannot expect a
significant number of engineers under the age of 24.
7
Figure 3.2.1: Age distribution
of the Indigenous and non-
Indigenous population,
Canada, 2016
Source:
Statistics Canada, 2016
Census of Population, Statistics
Canada Catalogue no. 98-400-
X2016357
Considering the different age distributions between the Indigenous and non-Indigenous populations in the
development of a suitable benchmark for Indigenous inclusion in engineering is a start, but we must also
consider the differences in the participation rate in the two populations. The participation rate is the ratio of
the labour force (employed + unemployed) to the total population. The participation rate in the Indigenous
population in their main working years tends to be lower than in the non-Indigenous population, and in 2016
this was indeed the case, as presented in Figure 3.2.2. If we were to ignore the discrepancy between the
Indigenous and non-Indigenous populations in terms of the participation rate in establishing our benchmark
for diversity, equity, and inclusion, we would be setting a high benchmark because we would not generally
expect people who are currently out of the labour force to be engineers, nor do we have an interest in
increasing the number of Indigenous engineers who are not in the labour force. Further, we account for the
difference in the participation rate between the Indigenous and non-Indigenous population because it is
unreasonable to expect that the policies and programs that Engineers Canada can deliver will be able to
materially change labour force participation in the Indigenous population.
Figure 3.2.2: Participation rate
of the Indigenous and the non-
Indigenous population by age
group, Canada, 2016
Source: Statistics Canada, 2016
Census of Population, Statistics
Canada Catalogue no. 98-400-
X2016266
Figure 3.2.3 compares the representation of Indigenous people in engineering and the representation of
Indigenous people in the labour force in their main working years, our benchmark for equitable Indigenous
inclusion in engineering. Only 0.93 per cent (2,870) of Indigenous people in their main working years are
engineers. Accounting for the younger Indigenous population and lower Indigenous participation in the labour
force produces an Engineers Canada benchmark for Indigenous inclusion of 3.15 per cent of the engineering
workforce. By this benchmark, for the engineering profession to include a representative number of
Indigenous people, an additional 6,820 Indigenous people in engineering occupations are required.
Figure 3.2.3: Indigenous
8
representation in engineering and
the labour force, aged 25 to 64,
Canada, 2016
Source: Statistics Canada, 2016
Census of Population, Statistics
Canada Catalogue no. 98-400-
X2016357 and no. 98-400-
X2016266
Notes: Total population counts, labour force counts, and engineer counts are for individuals aged 15 and
over. Counts of engineers are derived from the NOC codes 0211 - Engineering Managers, 213 - Civil,
mechanical, electrical, and chemical engineers, 214 - Other engineers, and 2173 - Software engineers.
Indigenous populations include those who identify as First Nations, Métis, Inuit, Registered or Treaty Indians,
and/or those who have membership in a First Nation band. All educational attainment levels are included.
3.2.2 Challenges with census data identifying professional engineers
Professional engineers are licensed by the 12 provincial and territorial engineering regulators. The
information we are reporting here is derived from the 2016 Census, which asks about respondents’
occupation, but it does not include a question that would allow us to definitively determine whether or not
they are licenced by the engineering regulators. However, because an individual must “hold an engineering
degree from a Canadian Engineering Accreditation Board-accredited undergraduate program or possess
equivalent qualifications” to be licenced, we restrict our analysis in this section to those individuals who both
report engineering as their profession and have an education at a bachelor level or above.
When we consider only engineers in their main working years with an education at a bachelor level or above,
only 0.73 per cent identify as Indigenous. Figure 3.2.4 shows the transition from the simplest benchmark
approach (overall Indigenous representation in engineering) to the more restrictive analysis of the presence
of Indigenous engineers in the engineering profession. This restrictive benchmark approach produces an
estimate of 1,685 Indigenous engineers that are in the labour force, of main working years, and have an
education level of a bachelor or above. If we use this more restrictive estimate of Indigenous representation
among professional engineers, we require an additional 5,620 Indigenous engineers to achieve our
benchmark of 3.15 per cent Indigenous representation in engineering.
Figure 3.2.4 Breakdown of
Indigenous engineer
estimation, Canada, 2016
Source: Statistics Canada, 2016
Census of Population, Statistics
Canada Catalogue no. 98-400-
X2016357
Notes: Counts of engineers are derived from the NOC codes 0211 - Engineering Managers, 213 - Civil,
mechanical, electrical, and chemical engineers, 214 - Other engineers, and 2173 - Software engineers. STEM
occupation NOC codes are derived from the WorkBC Labour Market Outlook Profile. All educational
attainment levels are included. Indigenous populations include those who identify as First Nations, Métis,
Inuit, Registered or Treaty Indians, and/or those who have membership in a First Nation band.
3.2.3 Engineering relative to other technical occupations
In Figure 3.2.5 we compare the percentage of the Indigenous labour force across different occupation types
for individuals in their main working years with an education at the bachelor level or above. Indigenous
representation is particularly low in engineering (0.73 per cent) compared to science, technology, and math
(STM) occupations (0.94 per cent) and the rest of the labour force (1.83 per cent). For those with an
education at a bachelor level or above, representation of Indigenous people in engineering is less than half
that of the broader labour force.
9
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Figure 3.2.5: Indigenous
representation in engineering,
STM occupations, and the labour
force with a university education
at the bachelor level or above,
aged 25 to 64 years, Canada,
2016
Source: Statistics Canada, 2016
Census of Population, Statistics
Canada Catalogue no. 98-400-
X2016357
Notes: Counts of engineers are derived from the NOC codes 0211 - Engineering Managers, 213 - Civil,
mechanical, electrical, and chemical engineers, 214 - Other engineers, and 2173 - Software engineers. STEM
occupation NOC codes are derived from the WorkBC Labour Market Outlook Profile. All educational
attainment levels are included. Indigenous populations include those who identify as First Nations, Métis,
Inuit, Registered or Treaty Indians, and/or those who have membership in a First Nation band.
3.2.4 Education
In Section 3.2.1 and 3.2.2, we examined subsets of the population (e.g. main working years) in order to
establish a reasonable benchmark for diversity, equity, and inclusion of the Indigenous population in
engineering and to understand the current level of Indigenous representation in engineering. In this, and
future sections, we drop the main working years and education level restrictions and present data for the
population aged 15 years and older. This broader analysis is done to provide an overall understanding of
where Engineers Canada could effectively direct their efforts to better support Indigenous engineers and
promote diversity, equity, and inclusion for different levels of education, in different provinces, for specific
engineering occupations, and across various demographic groups. Figure 3.2.6 presents the distribution of
engineers by highest level of educational attainment. Relative to Indigenous engineers, a higher percentage
of non-Indigenous engineers have completed a university certification, diploma, or degree at a bachelor level
or above. The implications of this finding are discussed in Section 3.2.2.
Figure 3.2.6: Highest educational
attainment of Indigenous and non-
Indigenous engineers, aged 15
years and over, Canada, 2016
Source: Statistics Canada, 2016
Census of Population, Statistics
Canada Catalogue no. 98-400-
X2016357
Notes: Counts of engineers are derived from the NOC codes 0211 - Engineering Managers, 213 - Civil,
mechanical, electrical, and chemical engineers, 214 - Other engineers, and 2173 - Software engineers. STEM
occupation NOC codes are derived from the WorkBC Labour Market Outlook Profile. Indigenous populations
include those who identify as First Nations, Métis, Inuit, Registered or Treaty Indians, and/or those who have
membership in a First Nation band.
3.2.5 Engineering specialization and Indigenous identity
10
There are four sub-categories within engineering represented by the following NOCs:
Figure 3.2.7 presents the distribution of Indigenous and non-Indigenous engineers among these sub-
categories for individuals with university education at the bachelor level or above. The percentage of
Indigenous and non-Indigenous engineers is similar for those in NOC groups 214 and 0211. The highest
percentage of Indigenous engineers work in NOC 213 occupations as civil, mechanical, electrical, or chemical
engineers (67.73 per cent). There is a lower percentage of Indigenous engineers in positions like software
engineering and designer roles, compared to non-Indigenous engineers (7.2 per cent versus 15 per cent). A
further breakdown of engineering occupations at the four-digit NOC level is provided in Figure A.1 in the
Appendix. The analysis at the four-digit NOC level is similar to the distribution for three-digit NOCs provided
in Figure 3.2.7.
Figure 3.2.7: Percent of Indigenous
engineers by three-digit NOC,
university education at the
bachelor level or above, aged 15
years and over, Canada, 2016
Source: Statistics Canada, 2016
Census of Population, Statistics
Canada Catalogue no. 98-400-
X2016357
Notes: Education is filtered for individuals who have a university education at the bachelor level or above.
Indigenous populations include those who identify as First Nations, Métis, Inuit, Registered or Treaty Indians,
and/or those who have membership in a First Nation band.
Figure 3.2.8 shows the percentage of engineers by their reported Indigenous identity for all levels of
education. Of the respondents, 55.14 per cent identify as being Métis, 39.55 per cent identify as being First
Nations, and the remaining 5.31 per cent identify as being Inuk, having multiple Indigenous identities, or did
not fit into the other categories provided. Individuals who identify as Métis are overrepresented in
engineering compared to the general Indigenous population and those who identify as First Nations and Inuk
are underrepresented in engineering.
Engineers Canada may want to consider an identity-specific approach to diversity, equity, and inclusion
instead of a pan-Indigenous approach. In general, the National Indigenous Organizations (NIO), the Assembly
of First Nations (AFN), Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami (ITK), and Métis National Council (MNC) that represent the
respective Indigenous populations in Canada prefer an identity-specific approach as it is able to consider the
specific circumstances of First Nations, Métis, and Inuit.
Figure 3.2.8: Indigenous identity of
engineers, aged 15 years and
over, Canada, 2016
Source: Statistics Canada, 2016
Census of Population, Statistics
NOC 213 - Civil, mechanical, electrical and chemical engineers
»
NOC 214 - Other engineers (industrial, petroleum, mining, etc.)
»
NOC 2173 - Software engineers
»
NOC 0211 - Engineering managers
»
11
Canada Catalogue no. 98-400-
X2016357
Notes: Counts of engineers are derived from the NOC codes 0211 - Engineering Managers, 213 - Civil,
mechanical, electrical, and chemical engineers, 214 - Other engineers, and 2173 - Software engineers. All
educational attainment levels are included.
3.2.6 Demographics
The distribution, in terms of age and sex, among Indigenous and non-Indigenous engineers is similar.
Regardless of Indigenous identity, 92 per cent of engineers are in their main working years. There is a
slightly higher percentage of non-Indigenous engineers over the age of 65 (four per cent non-Indigenous
compared to two per cent Indigenous). A more detailed analysis of the distribution of engineers by age can
be found in Figure A.2 of the Appendix.
In terms of sex, we find that females are underrepresented in engineering in both the Indigenous and non-
Indigenous population relative to their representation in the labour force.
Figure 3.2.9 presents the Indigenous engineering and labour force populations by sex for individuals in their
main working years. In the Indigenous labour force, there is an almost equal distribution of female and male
workers (50.21 per cent female, 49.79 per cent male), but within engineering only 15.83 per cent of
Indigenous engineers are female compared to 84.17 per cent who are male. This imbalance between males
and females in engineering is also found among non-Indigenous engineers where 14.77 per cent are female
and 85.23 per cent are male. The slightly higher percentage of Indigenous females in the labour force
compared to non-Indigenous females is reflected in the engineering workforce, where the distribution of
Indigenous female engineers is just over one per cent higher than non-Indigenous female engineers (15.83
per cent and 14.77 per cent, respectively).
Figure 3.2.9: Sex, Indigenous
identity, engineers and the labour
force, aged 25 to 64 years,
Canada, 2016
Source: Statistics Canada, 2016
Census of Population, Statistics
Canada Catalogue no. 98-400-
X2016357 and no. 98-400-
X2016266
Notes: Counts of engineers are derived from the NOC codes 0211 - Engineering Managers, 213 - Civil,
mechanical, electrical, and chemical engineers, 214 - Other engineers, and 2173 - Software engineers.
Indigenous populations include those who identify as First Nations, Métis, Inuit, Registered or Treaty Indians,
and/or those who have membership in a First Nation band.
3.2.7 Income
Figure 3.2.10 presents median income by age for Indigenous and non-Indigenous engineers that have a
university education at the bachelor level or above. Data for Indigenous engineers over the age of 65 have
been suppressed, indicating that the counts in that age group are very low, even at the national level.
On average, for those in their main working years, Indigenous engineers, that is, individuals in engineering
occupations, as described in Section 2.1.2 and listed in Section 3.1, earned slightly more ($1,500) than non-
Indigenous engineers in 2015.
12
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Figure 3.2.10: Median income by
age, Indigenous and non-
Indigenous engineers, university
education at the bachelor level or
above, Canada, 2016
Source: Statistics Canada, 2016
Census of Population, Statistics
Canada Catalogue no. 98-400-
X201635?7
Notes: Counts of engineers are derived from the NOC codes 0211 - Engineering Managers, 213 - Civil,
mechanical, electrical, and chemical engineers, 214 - Other engineers, and 2173 - Software engineers.
Education is filtered for individuals who have a university education at the bachelor level or above.
Indigenous populations include those who identify as First Nations, Métis, Inuit, Registered or Treaty Indians,
and/or those who have membership in a First Nation band. Within the age group of engineers 65 and over,
55% “worked part year, part time or full time", 37% "Worked full year full time", and 8% "Worked full year
part time". The lack of full year full time work is most likely driving the lower median income for this
demographic of engineers.
Figure 3.2.11 looks at the median income by age for engineers who have a university education at the
bachelor level or above. Engineering managers have the highest median income for both Indigenous and
non-Indigenous engineers, although non-Indigenous engineering managers make an estimated $6,300 more
than Indigenous engineering managers. Non-Indigenous engineers have a higher median income than
Indigenous engineers in every sub-category except for NOC 214, Other engineers, for which Indigenous
engineers make almost $13,000 more than non-Indigenous engineers. The unique occupations included in
NOC 214 are listed in Table 1.1. The remaining occupations included in NOCs 213 and 2173 have similar
median incomes between Indigenous and non-Indigenous populations.
Figure 3.2.11: Median income of
Indigenous and non-Indigenous
engineers by three-digit NOC,
university education at the
bachelor level or above, aged 15
years and over, Canada, 2016
Source: Statistics Canada, 2016
Census of Population, Statistics
Canada Catalogue no. 98-400-
X2016357??
Notes: All educational attainment levels are included. Indigenous populations include those who identify as
First Nations, Métis, Inuit, Registered or Treaty Indians, and/or those who have membership in a First Nation
band.
3.3 (Q3) Regional diversity of professional engineers
In order to guide the implementation of strategies to increase diversity among professional engineers and
identify opportunities to work with engineering regulators, we have examined 2016 Census data by province
and territory to roughly align with the regulators’ jurisdictions.
13
Counts of Indigenous engineers by level of educational attainment can be seen in Table 3.3.1. It is important
to note that due to random rounding
9
in the 2016 Census, in the regions with an already low number of
Indigenous engineers, it is hard to determine the actual changes in counts of engineers with and without
higher levels of education. For example, random rounding explains why Newfoundland and Labrador sees an
increase in the estimated number of Indigenous engineers when restricting education to only bachelor level
or above.
Table 3.3.1: Indigenous engineering counts by education level, aged 15 years and over,
provinces and territories, 2016
Geography
All education
levels
University
education at
bachelor level or
above
Alberta
600
375
British Columbia / Colombie-
Britannique
420
245
Manitoba
225
120
New Brunswick / Nouveau-Brunswick
30
35
Newfoundland and Labrador / Terre-
Neuve-et-Labrador
175
95
Northwest Territories / Territoires du
Nord-Ouest
20
0
Nova Scotia / Nouvelle-Écosse
150
95
Nunavut
0
0
Ontario
845
440
Prince Edward Island / Île-du-Prince-
Édouard
10
0
Quebec / Québec
410
325
Saskatchewan
190
130
Yukon
20
20
Canada
3105
1875
Source: Statistics Canada, 2016 Census of Population, Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 98-400-X2016357
Notes: Only individuals of Indigenous status are included in the analysis. Counts of engineers are derived
from the NOC codes 0211 - Engineering Managers, 213 - Civil, mechanical, electrical, and chemical
engineers, 214 - Other engineers, and 2173 - Software engineers. Indigenous populations include those who
identify as First Nations, Métis, Inuit, Registered or Treaty Indians, and/or those who have membership in a
First Nation band.
Figures 3.3.1 and 3.3.2 present the percentage of Indigenous engineers relative to the percentage of
Indigenous people in the labour force across provinces and territories for individuals in their main working
years. Figure 3.3.1 includes all measures of representation, whereas Figure 3.3.2 excludes any percentages
over 20 per cent and in doing so provides a closer look at jurisdictions that have smaller variations in
Indigenous representation. To facilitate specific comparisons, the percentages presented in Figure 3.3.1 are
provided in Table 3.3.2. Indigenous engineers are underrepresented in each province except Prince Edward
Island (P.E.I), where the percentage of Indigenous engineers is 2.33 per cent, which is higher than the
representation of Indigenous people P.E.I’s labour force (1.64 per cent). Nunavut has the highest gap in
terms of Indigenous representation in engineering, reporting that zero per cent of engineers are Indigenous
compared to Nunavut’s labour force that is 71.58 per cent Indigenous. Other major gaps in representation
are found in Northwest Territories, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Yukon. However, Northwest Territories and
Yukon also have the highest percentage of Indigenous engineers, along with Newfoundland and Labrador.
Primary data collection would be useful to determine additional contextual information regarding the paths
and experiences of Indigenous engineers in regions with more equitable representation compared to regions
that have large underrepresentation of Indigenous engineers.
14
Figure 3.3.1: Percentage of
Indigenous engineers and
Indigenous labour force, aged 25
to 64 years, provinces and
territories, 2016
Source: Statistics Canada, 2016
Census of Population, Statistics
Canada Catalogue no. 98-400-
X2016357 and no. 98-400-
X2016266?
Notes: Counts of engineers are derived from the NOC codes 0211 - Engineering Managers, 213 - Civil,
mechanical, electrical, and chemical engineers, 214 - Other engineers, and 2173 - Software engineers.
Indigenous populations include those who identify as First Nations, Métis, Inuit, Registered or Treaty Indians,
and/or those who have membership in a First Nation band.
Figure 3.3.2: Percentage of
Indigenous engineers and
Indigenous labour force, excluding
labour force rates greater than
20%*, aged 25 to 64 years,
provinces and territories, 2016
Source: Statistics Canada, 2016
Census of Population, Statistics
Canada Catalogue no. 98-400-
X2016357 and no. 98-400-
X2016266
Notes: Counts of engineers are derived from the NOC codes 0211 - Engineering Managers, 213 - Civil,
mechanical, electrical, and chemical engineers, 214 - Other engineers, and 2173 - Software engineers.
Indigenous populations include those who identify as First Nations, Métis, Inuit, Registered or Treaty Indians,
and/or those who have membership in a First Nation band.
*To better understand the variation across regions, the figure excludes rates for regions where the
percentage of Indigenous people in the labour force is greater than 20%.
Table 3.3.2: Percentage of Indigenous engineers and Indigenous labour force, age 25 to 64 years,
provinces and territories, 2016
Geography
Indigenous
engineers
Indigenous
labour
force
Difference
Nunavut
0.00%
71.58%
-71.58%
Northwest Territories / Territoires du Nord-
Ouest
5.41%
39.50%
-34.10%
15
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Manitoba
3.96%
12.92%
-8.96%
Saskatchewan
3.60%
11.07%
-7.47%
Yukon
12.90%
19.40%
-6.49%
British Columbia / Colombie-Britannique
1.10%
4.89%
-3.78%
Alberta
1.17%
4.92%
-3.75%
Newfoundland and Labrador /Terre-Neuve-
et-Labrador
5.09%
8.29%
-3.21%
Nova Scotia / Nouvelle-Écosse
2.23%
5.07%
-2.84%
New Brunswick / Nouveau-Brunswick
1.54%
3.43%
-1.89%
Ontario
0.65%
2.35%
-1.70%
Quebec / Québec
0.63%
1.98%
-1.35%
Prince Edward Island / Île-du-Prince-Édouard
2.30%
1.64%
0.66%
Source: Statistics Canada, 2016 Census of Population, Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 98-400-X2016357 and
no. 98-400-X2016266
Notes: Counts of engineers are derived from the NOC codes 0211 - Engineering Managers, 213 - Civil,
mechanical, electrical, and chemical engineers, 214 - Other engineers, and 2173 - Software engineers.
Indigenous populations include those who identify as First Nations, Métis, Inuit, Registered or Treaty Indians,
and/or those who have membership in a First Nation band.
3.4 (Q4) Additional variables
This section presents additional variables available in the 2016 Census and other Statistics Canada products
that could help to better understand diversity among professional engineers. Table 3.4.1 presents a list of
diversity-related variables included in the 2016 Census. Understanding the representation of engineers
among these additional groups can be achieved by investigating the intersection of engineering-related
NOCs and these additional diversity-related variables. While some data tables that include both these
diversity-related variables and occupational classification are publicly available, most would need to be
obtained from Statistics Canada through a custom table request.
Table 3.4.1: Diversity variables by subject, 2016 Census
Subject
Variables
Families, households and marital
status
Opposite/same-sex married spouse or
common-law partner
Opposite/same-sex status
Language
First official language spoken
Home language
Language spoken most often at home
Other language(s) spoken regularly at
home
Language of work
Language used most often at work
Other language(s) used regularly at
work
Knowledge of official languages
Mother tongue
Immigration and ethnocultural
diversity
Age at immigration
Citizenship
Ethnic origin
Generation status
Immigrant status
Place of birth
16
Place of birth of father
Place of birth of mother
Population group
Year of immigration
Visible minority
Source: Statistics Canada, Dictionary, Census of Population, 2016 (Employment and Social Development
Canada, 2020)
To date, Statistics Canada census products have not collected information on the gender identities of people
in Canada. In order to recognize the diversity of the Canadian population and better represent the identities
of LGBTQ2+ respondents, the 2021 Census questionnaire will include the more precise term "sex at birth"
and a new question about gender (Statistics Canada, 2019b). The 2021 Census will also collect information
on religion, which was not included in the 2016 Census (Statistics Canada, 2020c).
Other statistical products and surveys from Statistics Canada include relevant diversity-related variables.
Table 3.4.2 presents select programs and surveys capturing diversity-related variables of interest.
Table 3.4.2: Diversity variables in Statistics Canada statistical products and surveys
Statistical product or survey
Diversity variable
Canadian Survey on Disability (CSD)
Disability
Canadian Community Health Survey -
Annual component (CCHS) - 2020
Sexual Orientation
Perceived Mental Health
Perceived Physical Health
National Household Survey (NHS) -
2011
Religion
Longitudinal Immigration Database
(IMDB)
Immigrant Status
Labour Force Survey (LFS)
Gender
Immigrant Status
Country of origin
Country of highest education
Source: Statistics Canada, 2019a, 2013, 2016a, 2019c, 2020b)
These diversity variables are available at varying geographies, time periods, and level of aggregation
depending on the statistical program or survey. The occupation classification system used within the survey
or program varies between NOCs, the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS)
10
, and other
occupation groupings of assorted detail. Each occupation classification provides varying degrees of precision
when matching to engineering occupations. Accessing information at the intersection of diversity variables
and engineering occupation classifications can be examined using NOC codes corresponding to engineering.
When NOCs are not available for a survey or product, diversity variables can be examined using other
occupation classifications or Major Field of Study to infer engineering occupation. A helpful resource that
supports reflection and conversations on diversity is the Statistics Canada Centre for Gender, Diversity and
Inclusion portal
11
. This portal can be used to explore data at a national and provincial level through a
diversity and inclusion lens.
4.0 Recommendations for future research
To gain further understanding of the diversity of professional engineers, specifically Indigenous engineers,
Engineers Canada would benefit from conducting a primary data collection exercise. Primary data collection
involves determining a clearly articulated set of research questions that will guide the research process and
be used to describe the information needs of the project. It is a complex undertaking that should be used
when secondary data is unable to meet the research needs of the project. There are several different ways to
gather primary data that can be adjusted based on the needs, budget, time, and secondary data available for
the proposed research project.
The data used in this report are capable of producing analysis that highlights the current state of Indigenous
engineers in terms of their representation, distribution, demographics, and some education and labour force
17
characteristics. A highly detailed contextual analysis was not feasible given the limitations of the secondary
data currently available. Primary data could provide insight on any specific question that is of interest to
Engineers Canada or the regulators, and could also:
In terms of next steps, we recommend conducting minor additional secondary data analysis using the
alternative variables discussed in Section 3.4 and ordering custom tabulations of the 2016 Census to push
the available secondary data to its limits. Having exhausted the available secondary data, we recommend
starting the process of collecting primary data. The main steps involved in a primary data collection exercise
include:
1.
Holding a Statement of Objectives meeting that will be used to guide the project. The Statement of
Objectives meeting and resulting document will define the information needs, users and use of the
data, any operational definitions, the target population, the content of the survey, and the analysis
plan. It will also consider the project timeline and budget, which will inform the method and depth of
the data collection.
2.
Enumerating the survey. One potential method of enumerating would be to distribute questionnaires
or conduct over the phone/online surveys through the regulators to their pool of current registrants.
This enumeration could be done for a sample of the registrants or the total registrants, depending on
the resources that are available.
3.
Validate the data for quality and accuracy. Valid and accurate data can be used to create the
estimates, tables, and charts that have been previously planned in the Statements of Objectives.
4.
Draft an interim report that presents the findings and answers to the research questions.
5.
Produce visualizations and communications materials to disseminate the answers to the research
questions.
There is also the opportunity to harness administrative data processes to better understand diversity among
professional engineers. For example, questions related to Indigenous identity or other diversity-related
categorizations could be included in the licensing and registration processes of the regulators. Implementing
data collection processes to answer Engineer Canada’s research questions that use existing administrative
data processes would allow for detailed analyses and, over time, a profound understanding of the diversity or
lack thereof among professional engineers.
Finally, there is an opportunity for data sharing between Engineers Canada and the higher education
institutions responsible for the delivery of accredited engineering programs. Linking information collected by
Engineers Canada to data collected by higher education institutions could provide a comprehensive portrait
of the engineering profession, its diversity, and the different paths that exist to becoming an engineer.
Appendix
Develop a more accurate count of professional engineers instead of using estimates for individuals
working in an engineering occupation classified under the NOC system.
»
Produce findings at lower geographic levels such as Census Metropolitan Areas (CMAs) and rural
areas. This could be used to better understand the representation of Indigenous engineers across the
12 regulators and produce baseline counts that could be used to measure the progress of equity,
diversity and inclusion by region.
»
Conduct cross-sectional analysis at these lower geographic levels by producing estimates
conditional on multiple factors, for example, the distribution of engineers by education level and
specific engineering occupations for different CMAs.
»
Determine the specific accredited post-secondary program and institution attended by professional
engineers.
»
Determine the path to employment after post-secondary education (PSE). For example:
»
Did students participate in co-op or internship programs?
»
Were they forced to relocate for work?
»
What was their experience accessing education?
»
Was funding a barrier?
»
Was the physical location of the program a barrier?
»
Investigate the distribution of Indigenous engineers among management and senior roles. For
example:
»
Is there a lack of Indigenous representation in senior engineering positions? If so, how does this
influence the perception of achieving success, in terms of seniority, as an Indigenous engineer.
»
18
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Figure A.1: Percent of Indigenous
and non-Indigenous engineers by
four-digit NOC, aged 15 years and
over, Canada, 2016
Source: Statistics Canada, 2016
Census of Population, Statistics
Canada Catalogue no. 98-400-
X2016357?
Notes: All educational attainment levels are included. Indigenous populations include those who identify as
First Nations, Métis, Inuit, Registered or Treaty Indians, and/or those who have membership in a First Nation
band.
Figure A.2: Age of Indigenous and
non-Indigenous engineers,
Canada, 2016
Source: Statistics Canada, 2016
Census of Population, Statistics
Canada Catalogue no. 98-400-
X2016357??
Notes: Counts of engineers are derived from the NOC codes 0211 - Engineering Managers, 213 - Civil,
mechanical, electrical, and chemical engineers, 214 - Other engineers, and 2173 - Software engineers. All
educational attainment levels are included. Indigenous populations include those who identify as First
Nations, Métis, Inuit, Registered or Treaty Indians, and/or those who have membership in a First Nation band.
Figure A.3: Median income of
Indigenous and non-Indigenous
engineers by four-digit NOC and
age, Canada, 2016
Source: Statistics Canada, 2016
Census of Population, Statistics
Canada Catalogue no. 98-400-
X2016357?
Notes: All educational attainment levels are included. Indigenous populations include those who identify as
First Nations, Métis, Inuit, Registered or Treaty Indians, and/or those who have membership in a First
19
End notes
1
“The Truth and Reconciliation Commission was formed as a means of reckoning with the devastating legacy
of forced assimilation and abuse left by the residential school system. From 2008 to 2014, the Truth and
Reconciliation Commission heard stories from thousands of residential school survivors. In June 2015, the
commission released a report based on those hearings. From that came the 94 Calls to Action: individual
instructions to guide governments, communities and faith groups down the road to reconciliation” (Beyond
94, 2018).
2
The Canadian Indigenous Advisory Council provides guidance and support to the Canadian Indigenous
Science and Engineering Society (caISES). caISES functions to support, mentor, and provide networking
opportunities for Indigenous peoples in STEM through at all levels of their educational and professional
experience (Canadian Region of AISES, 2018).
3
The Labour Force Survey, 2016 Census, Aboriginal Peoples Survey, and other Statistics Canada products
use the term Aboriginal to refer to those who identify as First Nations, Métis, or Inuk (Inuit) within Canada. In
this report we use the term Indigenous to refer to the same three groups.
4
The academic requirements for becoming a professional engineer include holding “an engineering degree
from a Canadian Engineering Accreditation Board-accredited undergraduate program or possess equivalent
qualifications” (
Overview of the Licensing Process
, 2020).
5
Indigenous identity is reported for individuals identifying as First Nations (North American Indian), Métis or
Inuk (Inuit) and/or those who are Registered or Treaty Indians, and/or those who have membership in a First
Nation or Indian band.
6
Because of incomplete enumeration the total count of missing data can only be estimated using instances
where reserves and settlements have provided responses in previous census years.
7
Institutions refers to correctional facilities, prisons, or places housing those who are incarcerated
8
Eligible households are those that are not on an Indigenous reserve or settlement, not in an institution, not
members of the armed forces, and do not reside in remote areas with very small population density. Eligible
households reflect individuals who are capable of participating in the labour market and can be consistently
accessed for data collection.
9
Statistics Canada rounds small values to either 0 or 5, (depending on other attributes in the table they may
round to 0 or 10). For example, if a cell value is 2, but publicly releasing that precise value might risk
identifying a respondent, it will be randomly rounded to 0 or 5. That is, the value that appears in the public
table has the same probability of being 0 as it does 5, they do not round to the nearest value.
10
“NAICS is a comprehensive system encompassing all economic activities. It has a hierarchical structure. At
the highest level, it divides the economy into 20 sectors. At lower levels, it further distinguishes the different
economic activities in which businesses are engaged.” (Statistics Canada, 2018c)
11
https://www.statcan.gc.ca/eng/topics-start/gender_diversity_and_inclusion
References
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diversity-in-engineering
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canada
Beyond 94: Truth and Reconciliation in Canada
. (2018, March 9). https://newsinteractives.cbc.ca/longform-
single/beyond-94
Canadian Region of AISES. (2018, November 29). .
CaISES – Canadian Region of AISES
. AISES.
https://www.aises.org/membership/caises
Calls to Action Accountability: A Status Update on Reconciliation. (2019, December 17).
Yellowhead Institute
.
https://yellowheadinstitute.org/2019/12/17/calls-to-action-accountability-a-status-update-on-reconciliation/
20
Cathy MacDonald & Aubrey Steenbeek. (2015). The impact of colonization and western assimilation on
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standards/reports/employment-equity-data-report-2016.html
Indigenous Peoples in Engineering
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Katherine Wall, Statistics Canada. (2019, May 2).
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programs
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Legislative Services, S. C. (2017, December 12).
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https://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/S-19/page-5.html#docCont
OECD. (2018). Indigenous labour market outcomes in Canada. In OECD,
Indigenous Employment and Skills
Strategies in Canada
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Overview of the Licensing Process
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List of abbreviations
2016 Census: 2016 Census of the Population
AFN: Assembly of First Nations
APS: 2017 Aboriginal Peoples Survey
CMA: Census Metropolitan Area
CU: collection unit
ESDC: Employment and Social Development Canada
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GNR: global non-response rate
ITK: Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami
LFS: Labour Force Survey
Main working years: ages 25-64
MNC: Métis National Council
NAICS: North American Industry Classification System
NHS: 2011 National Household Survey
NIO: National indigenous Organizations
NOC: National Occupation Classifications
PSE: Post-secondary education
RDC: Research Data Centre
RTRA: Real Time Remote Access
STM: science, technology, and math
TRC: Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada
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